748
Encrypted code
Danish filmmaker Leon Giesen said that he knew where the hidden Nazi treasure whose existence until recently there were only rumors. He believes that the place of the treasure hidden in the musical notes.
In recent weeks, it was made three attempts to find gold at the coordinates extracted from the music - in the Bavarian town of Mittenwald, at the Austrian border. Unfortunately, they have not met with success, and tidy Germans quickly buried the resulting hole.
I must say that the work is carried out with the permission of the authorities and all the formalities. Local residents were divided - some occurring amuses, annoys others. Himself 51-year-old director and musician Giesen has no doubt that the treasure consisting of gold and diamonds somewhere here in the end will be found. Generally Bavaria - fertile ground for the emergence of the new Indiana Jones, not one. In 1944, when things went bad from the Germans, one of the most powerful men in Nazi Germany, Heinrich Himmler offered to build a fortress here Alpine - National Redoubt, where the Nazis had to fight to the end.
And that's not all. In April 1945, the leadership of the Wehrmacht and the Reichsbank officials approved a plan to postpone part of the national reserves in a small town Aynsidl, located on the southwestern shore of Lake Walch. Most of these treasures fell into the hands of the Allies, but the order of 100 bars of gold, a few bags of dollars and Swiss francs and other valuables disappeared without a trace. According to legend, in the last days of World War II, Hitler's private secretary Martin Bormann jotted down the letters, which contained the encrypted coordinates of Nazi treasure. Letters supposed to bring someone in Munich. However, to convey them to their destination failed, and they fell into the hands of the Danish journalist Carl Kaatee. Carl spent several years in unsuccessful attempts to decipher the documents and, in desperation, last December published them, hoping that someone is still succeed.
And recently, film director Giesen said that solved the riddle. He based his theory on the score, "Marsh-Impromptu" by composer Gottfried Federline.
Giesen said that the phrase "Wo Matthias die Saiten Streichelt" ("Where Matthias pulls the strings") - is an allusion to the name of the town of Mittenwald and its famous inhabitant, master violin Mathias Klotz. Furthermore. Giesen sure that encryption provides a diagram of trains through Mittenwald 1940, and that the phrase "Enden der Tanz" ("the end of the dance") means that the treasures buried in the place where at that time was resistant timber.
In a sense, the search proved fruitful - in any case, the land was discovered a large number of unknown metal. "Geologists call it an anomaly - the findings clearly not from around here, - says Giesen. Now he is looking for a company that specializes in excavation, to continue the search and plans to withdraw its draft of a documentary film.
Source: othereal.ru
In recent weeks, it was made three attempts to find gold at the coordinates extracted from the music - in the Bavarian town of Mittenwald, at the Austrian border. Unfortunately, they have not met with success, and tidy Germans quickly buried the resulting hole.
I must say that the work is carried out with the permission of the authorities and all the formalities. Local residents were divided - some occurring amuses, annoys others. Himself 51-year-old director and musician Giesen has no doubt that the treasure consisting of gold and diamonds somewhere here in the end will be found. Generally Bavaria - fertile ground for the emergence of the new Indiana Jones, not one. In 1944, when things went bad from the Germans, one of the most powerful men in Nazi Germany, Heinrich Himmler offered to build a fortress here Alpine - National Redoubt, where the Nazis had to fight to the end.
And that's not all. In April 1945, the leadership of the Wehrmacht and the Reichsbank officials approved a plan to postpone part of the national reserves in a small town Aynsidl, located on the southwestern shore of Lake Walch. Most of these treasures fell into the hands of the Allies, but the order of 100 bars of gold, a few bags of dollars and Swiss francs and other valuables disappeared without a trace. According to legend, in the last days of World War II, Hitler's private secretary Martin Bormann jotted down the letters, which contained the encrypted coordinates of Nazi treasure. Letters supposed to bring someone in Munich. However, to convey them to their destination failed, and they fell into the hands of the Danish journalist Carl Kaatee. Carl spent several years in unsuccessful attempts to decipher the documents and, in desperation, last December published them, hoping that someone is still succeed.
And recently, film director Giesen said that solved the riddle. He based his theory on the score, "Marsh-Impromptu" by composer Gottfried Federline.
Giesen said that the phrase "Wo Matthias die Saiten Streichelt" ("Where Matthias pulls the strings") - is an allusion to the name of the town of Mittenwald and its famous inhabitant, master violin Mathias Klotz. Furthermore. Giesen sure that encryption provides a diagram of trains through Mittenwald 1940, and that the phrase "Enden der Tanz" ("the end of the dance") means that the treasures buried in the place where at that time was resistant timber.
In a sense, the search proved fruitful - in any case, the land was discovered a large number of unknown metal. "Geologists call it an anomaly - the findings clearly not from around here, - says Giesen. Now he is looking for a company that specializes in excavation, to continue the search and plans to withdraw its draft of a documentary film.
Source: othereal.ru